This site, like many others, uses small files called cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on this website (Cookie Policy). However, if you would like to, you can change your cookie settings at any time.

The three Eggner brothers have gradually gained an international reputation since they formed their piano trio in 1997, winning the 1999 Brahms Competition and the 2003 Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition and touring widely to critical acclaim. Their debut CD offers musically imaginative accounts of Beethoven’s two best-known piano trios, performed with a potent mixture of authority and enthusiasm.

The explosive start to op.70 no.1 sets the tone for the Eggners’ intense, dramatic and strikingly detailed reading, combining first-class individual contributions with impeccable ensemble and unanimity of interpretative approach. The clarity of pianist Christoph’s articulation is especially remarkable (though less so in the lighter-weight finale), as are also the colourful lyricism, warm tone and persuasive phrasing of his brothers’ playing, All three combine to achieve that aura of timelessness that characterises the expressive central movement, and their playing is unfailing perceptive throughout, spawning new musical insights and a wide range of contrasting emotions.

The Eggners’ gentle unfolding and nourishing of the opening movement of the ‘Archduke’ Trio are brilliantly contrived, though without the last touch of humanity and depth achieved by some more established ensembles. Nevertheless, spontaneity and warmth are combined with a carefully predetermined sense of the music’s breadth and overall architecture. The impish Scherzo and its mysterious fugato trio section are nimbly overcome, and individuals shine in the subsequent variation movement, notably Christoph (in var.1) and violinist Georg (in var.3). The rondo finale is dispatched with due energy and verve. The naturally balanced recording has an attractive combination of warmth and intimacy.